LOW-TEMPERATURE MAGNETIZATION AND THERMOREMANENCE OF FECL2-CENTER-DOT-H2O

Citation
Gc. Defotis et al., LOW-TEMPERATURE MAGNETIZATION AND THERMOREMANENCE OF FECL2-CENTER-DOT-H2O, Journal of applied physics, 81(8), 1997, pp. 4403-4405
Citations number
13
Categorie Soggetti
Physics, Applied
Journal title
ISSN journal
00218979
Volume
81
Issue
8
Year of publication
1997
Part
2A
Pages
4403 - 4405
Database
ISI
SICI code
0021-8979(1997)81:8<4403:LMATOF>2.0.ZU;2-4
Abstract
The latest member of the new series of transition metal dichloride mon ohydrates to exhibit novel magnetic behavior is FeCl2 . H2O. Reported here are field cooled and zero-field cooled magnetizations (M-FC and M -ZFC, respectively) for different fields as a function of temperature, and time-dependent thermoremanent magnetizations (TRM) for different temperatures and wait times. Near 20.4 K a peak appears in both M-FC a nd M-ZFC using H=106 G, as seen previously. In the smaller fields of 2 6.5 and 0.1 G, M-FC is more nearly constant for temperatures below the 20.4 K peak in M-ZFC which still appears. The irreversible magnetizat ion, M-FC-M-ZFC, is more pronounced for lower measuring field. Unusual behavior is seen in the temperature and wait-time (t(w)) dependence o f TRM(t). Data at 4.4 K (0.22T(c)) show no wait time, or aging, effect s, using a cooling field of 9.95 G. At 15.1 K (0.74T(c)), for the same cooling field, differences occur among TRM(t) data for t(w)=10, 100, and 500 min. The data become essentially coincident, however, if the m easuring time is scaled by the wait time. Although the general behavio r is similar at 18.0 K (0.88T(c)), there is a noticeable shift of the t(w)=500 min data in this case. The results suggest that below the cri tical temperature the system must equilibrate among a huge number of m etastable states. It takes an almost infinite time to probe all these states below 0.88T(c), which explains the t/t(w) scaling. At 0.22T(c), the system remains stuck in one specific state and the aging disappea rs. Two different time scales appear to control the relaxation. The ob served properties are not altogether typical of spin glasses, and the system may better be viewed as a weakly and randomly coupled array of ferromagnetic chains, in which dynamic domains readily form and evolve , and in which the aging effects are associated with domain wall growt h. (C) 1997 American Institute of Physics.